🚨Wanted: Tips for Raising Hormonal Bad Boys

Kiki

🙄🤚Do More!😩🤚 Less is More®
Project Manager
Premium Feather Member
6 Years
Jul 31, 2015
133,899
907,650
2,232
Houston, TX
My Coop
My Coop
What can one do to help prevent the hormonal boys from beating up the girls in the flock?

Pretend you have a new flock... all the birds are the same age.

All of a sudden a couple of the males decided to start beating up a girl or two.

How do I stop them from continuing to beat her/them up?
 

EverythingDucks

🙄🤚 𝙻𝚒𝚝𝚝𝚕𝚎 𝙳𝚞𝚌𝚔
Premium Feather Member
May 7, 2020
8,356
81,582
1,196
The Bermuda Triangle
I'm currently trying to rehome four of the cockerels. No luck yet.

As for the bullied cockerel, he is a Polish and his head feathers haven't been able to fully come in due to being picked on in the brooder.
At first it was not just the other cockerels who were picking on him. Which ever ones saw the blood from his feathers breaking would pick on him. So he was removed from the coop (long story) for about two days. I was hoping it hadn't been too long and set him in the coop while I was adding bedding to the box I was keeping him in, and two of the other cockerels immediately went after him. This was at night when they were all on the roosting bars.

This was obviously not a smart decision on my part, which I realized right away. I'm not sure I would consider this all to be aggression from the cockerels. It seems to me like they were just picking on him because of the bald spot and only attacked when I set him back in after being separated for a few days.

Aside from the situation with the polish (who is now in a dog kennel in the coop) the cockerels are getting along fine. The few times they've bothered eachother another cockerel broke it up.
Though I do have way too many at the moment and one of them likes to bite so I will be rehoming all but three.
I'm trying to figure out how to deal with them until they're gone if they do cause any problems.
 

room onthebroom

Animal-a-holic
Premium Feather Member
7 Years
May 4, 2015
13,781
134,396
1,567
33. N -117.W
So the boys are just beating up the one girl. They seem to get along with everyone else for now.

Does the one girl stay confined or do they need to remove one of the mean boys?




There is no right way or one answer. I know.

We just need ideas on things to try to keep the peace for a little when longer.
I wouldn’t isolate her unless she’s bloody. I might isolate the roosters.
 

Kiki

🙄🤚Do More!😩🤚 Less is More®
Project Manager
Premium Feather Member
6 Years
Jul 31, 2015
133,899
907,650
2,232
Houston, TX
My Coop
My Coop
Then I don't see the need to make a thread that says to try and find solutions and mislead people like me who are not interested in cockerel stew 😁. Thanks for the prompt reply though!
Calm down...you may learn something useful here. If you learn nothing else you'll learn that not everyone has the same point of view.
 

JacinLarkwell

Enabler
Mar 19, 2020
19,442
57,387
1,091
South-Eastern Montana
What if this pullet, that was being targeted, turned out to be a male!


Does he, the picked on one, get a free pass to stay for good now?
I wouldn't say so.

i've seen (haven't encountered it personally apart from once and it was quite delayed, so unsure what happened there) where people have 2 [or 3 or 4 or 5] males, including a very submissive male that is treated poorly by the others. They cull the assertive ones, keep the submissive one, and the power goes to his head and he becomes quite aggressive.

I'm sure it isn't always that way, but I do know it has happened
 

R2elk

*
Premium Feather Member
9 Years
Feb 24, 2013
39,138
198,935
1,671
Natrona County, Wyoming
My Coop
My Coop
So the boys are just beating up the one girl. They seem to get along with everyone else for now.

Does the one girl stay confined or do they need to remove one of the mean boys?




There is no right way or one answer. I know.

We just need ideas on things to try to keep the peace for a little while longer.
If the Ghost isn't ready to choose which cockerel gets to live, all the cockerels need to be separated from all of the pullets.
 

Rhodebar Lover

Brahma Fanatic
7 Years
Apr 5, 2015
10,021
11,357
711
Arrington, Tennessee USA
I wouldn’t isolate her unless she’s bloody. I might isolate the roosters.
Agreed!! This is a problem with the roosters. Separate whoever is going to be rehomed. Don't remove the poor hen and mess up the pecking order further and have her become more stressed upon reintroduction
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Top Bottom